Chattanooga Times Free Press

Man in central China survives three days in a flooded garage

- BY DAKE KANG

ZHENGZHOU, China — A man in central China was rescued after spending three days trapped in a flooded undergroun­d garage following torrential rains, while at least four bodies were found after a traffic tunnel was drained, a news report said Saturday.

The death toll rose to 58 after record rains hit the major city of Zhengzhou on Tuesday, state TV reported, citing Li Changxun, deputy director of Henan Provincial Emergency Management Department.

Meanwhile, rescuers used bulldozers and rubber boats to evacuate residents of areas that still were under water, according to the Shanghai news outlet The Paper.

The rains flooded a Zhengzhou subway tunnel where at least 12 people died, knocked out power to a hospital and other buildings and left streets filled with mud. Dozens of trains in the region were delayed for up to 40 hours.

Li Yongsheng was found Friday afternoon in a garage under the Jincheng Internatio­nal Plaza in Zhengzhou’s Jinshui District, The Paper said. It said he was trapped when the garage flooded Tuesday and lay on a ventilatio­n duct surrounded by floating cars.

A photo on The Paper’s website showed Li being guided by rescue workers through chest-deep water. It said he was hospitaliz­ed with a crush injury.

On Saturday, skies were mostly clear but parts of Zhengzhou and other cities including Hebi, Xinxiang and Anyang still were under water.

In Hebi, rescuers were moving people out of neighborho­ods where water was up to 6 feet deep, The Paper said. It said authoritie­s intentiona­lly flooded parts of Hebi on Saturday afternoon to lower water levels elsewhere.

A video on The Paper’s website showed rescuers in boats making their way down streets through waist-deep water.

In Zhengzhou, a city of 12 million people, bodies and more than 200 wrecked cars were found in the Jingguang North Road Tunnel, where water up to 43 feet deep was pumped out, The Paper reported.

Some downtown streets and intersecti­ons remained flooded with a few inches of water, in places knee-deep. Crews of emergency workers pumped water, removed debris, and laid sandbags down on pedestrian crossings. Rows of army trucks were parked at some intersecti­ons, hung with red banners with slogans like “We must not let up in bringing relief to disaster areas; we must not let up in protecting the people.”

Large swaths of the city have resumed normal life, with shoppers thronging upscale shopping malls and the elderly dancing on outdoor plazas.

 ?? AP PHOTO/DAKE KANG ?? Residents walk along a flooded road in the aftermath of the heaviest recorded rainfall in Zhengzhou in central China’s Henan province on Saturday.
AP PHOTO/DAKE KANG Residents walk along a flooded road in the aftermath of the heaviest recorded rainfall in Zhengzhou in central China’s Henan province on Saturday.

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